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9 Soc. F. 370 (1930-1931)
Journalism as Social Science

handle is hein.journals/josf9 and id is 388 raw text is: SOCIAL FORCES
JOURNALISM      AS SOCIAL SCIENCE
CLARENCE E. CASON
University of Alabama

FFORTS to achieve durable social
consequences through the teaching
of journalism are in process at a
number of American universities.' Present
aims go beyond what has been attempted
in the past.2 While the usefulness of
training newspaper reporters is not to be
discounted, it remains true that such work
is only one of several functions which
press upon the teacher of journalism.
Yet, journalism departments in most of the
universities heretofore have been so in-
tent upon administering the small tech-
nical detail of the news room that the
really significant scholarship in journalism
has been left to the historians, the psy-
chologists, and the sociologists.3 The
definition of journalism in the colleges has
implied a routine technique, and but little
more.
College instruction in journalism is
about twenty-five years old in the United
States.4 In France, England, and Ger-
many, its development has covered about
I For the nucleu  of several ideas in this paper,
indebtedness is thankfully expressed to Prof. Willard
G. Bleyer of the University of Wisconsin, Dean Eric
W. Allen of the University of Oregon, and Prof. E.
Marion Johnson, formerly of the University of
Minnesota.
2 Scholarly impetus in journalism is ably repre-
sented by The Journalism Quarterly, which has recently
been transformed under the editorship of Prof. Frank
Luther Mott of the University of Iowa.
3Perhaps most authoritative and stimulating
among American studies in journalism are the com-
panion volumes entitled The Newspaper as Authority
and The Newspaper and the Historian; New York; 192.3;
by Lucy Maynard Salmon, professor of history at
Vassar.
I General Robert E. Lee, as president of Washing-
ton University (now Washington and Lee), is credited
with establishing the first courses in journalism in
1869, but the movement was not sysematically de-
veloped until many years afterward.

the same period. The French and English,
while mainly concerned with the training
of newspaper workers, have concentrated
upon background in the social sciences,
rather than upon elementary technical
processes.   The    Germans,     characteris-
tically, have shown the way in evolving a
scientific approach to journalism in the
universities. Zeitungswissenschaft has no
direct connection with teaching boys and
girls to be reporters or press agents. It
is newspaper science.5 The curricula of
the German departments of journalism, of
which there are twelve in the higher in-
stitutions, deal profoundly with the peri-
odical as a social force. At the Univer-
sity of London the student of journalism
becomes seeped in the detail and traditions
of the English press, and his professional
training consists largely of such studies
in the social sciences as will fit him to
grapple intelligently with the movements
and conditions of his day. Because of the
peculiarly partisan character of the French
newspapers, especially those of Paris, the
study of journalism in France involves an
even more intricate analysis of political
backgrounds and social theory.6
In startling contrast to the view which
sees journalism as a ramified phenomenon
demanding assiduous scholarship is the
attitude which posits the study of journal-
ism as a shallow training for mechanical
news-gathering and headline-writing. This
I The German point of view is admirably portrayed
in Karl Bbmer's Bibliographische Handbuch der Zeit-
ungswissenschaft. Kritische und Systematische Ein-
fiihrung in den Stand der Deutschen Zeitungsforchung;
Leipzig, 1929.
0 Distinctive aspects of the French newspapers are
briefly set forth in an article called The Daily Press
in France by Raphael Levy in The Modern Language
Journal, XIII, no. 4.

370

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